The Nokia 770 a great step forward in having additional Linux PDA devices (other than Sharp) that we can hack. I think Nokia 770 development and usage fits well into our community here. Here are my forum thoughts:

The internet table talk one seems to have very few contributors, certainly in the developers section.

I don't know what the answer is.

I bet there will be a 'brainstorming session' and oesf will be renamed to 'Internet Device Talk Forum'

But more to the point: Neither oesf or itt is a developer forum, since the people doing dev use IRC and mailinglists.The itt forum is already there and accessible and it puzzles me why 'a forum for maemo/the 770' can't be on itt, but has to be here. I'm certain that the number of developers using gtk is greater on itt than here.

Like I said before: creating forums all over the net leads to fragmentation. You sharp-victims are used to that, but it is *not* a good thing

I don't have a N770 (yet) but would like to discuss it here because I hate to have a login at thousends of different forums...

And, I did never hear anything about the Internet Tablet forum (and would have never searched for that) because the N770 is for me not an "Internet tablet" but simply a Linux PDA with a high resolution display. And having WLAN&Bluetooth (which many other PDAs also have). So, what't special with it to keep it separate?

I don't have a N770 (yet) but would like to discuss it here because I hate to have a login at thousends of different forums...

And, I did never hear anything about the Internet Tablet forum (and would have never searched for that) because the N770 is for me not an "Internet tablet" but simply a Linux PDA with a high resolution display. And having WLAN&Bluetooth (which many other PDAs also have). So, what't special with it to keep it separate?

Nokia markets it as a 'internet tablet', even the box it's in says so. Now surf to http://planet.maemo.org/ and count how many times this forum is referenced and how many times the itt forum is mentioned.

Personally I'm running GPE on my 770, and am going to start hacking away to try to work out how Nokia get battery info, etc.

Sounds like it should be interesting

Si

That's really cool! I'd love to see some other distros/builds for the 770 (although I'm sure I'll get flamed for even saying that). I'm NOT saying Hildon isn't the way to go for normal users, but unix geeks want OPTIONS. I'd love to hear more about what lardman is doing on his 770, and that's kind of what I was thinking with these forums.

We may not have enough people now, but I think you'll find there will be a LOT of 770 owners soon.

I don't have a N770 (yet) but would like to discuss it here because I hate to have a login at thousends of different forums...

And, I did never hear anything about the Internet Tablet forum (and would have never searched for that) because the N770 is for me not an "Internet tablet" but simply a Linux PDA with a high resolution display. And having WLAN&Bluetooth (which many other PDAs also have). So, what't special with it to keep it separate?

-- hns

Exactly right. How is the Nokia 770 different from the SIMpad, Archos, iPAQ, and Zaurus; all of which have forums here?

And fwiw: nokia doesn't use a ROM, but a writable flash chip so it doesn't fit in any of the mentioned categories

That seems like a kind of odd differentiator. ...Neither is truly a ROM, as it can be written to. What difference does it make what the hardware vendors call their chips, as they do the exact same thing?

Don't put too much thought into it. Koen's statement was part of his expurgatorial crusade against misleading and/or incorrect terms. The major thing differenciating the Nokia Internet Tablet from a Zaurus is that the company behind it seems actually interested in the success and is taking care about developers.

Adhering to my own crusade against fragmentation, I'd suggest promoting the itt forum as the 'definite' one

The major thing differenciating the Nokia Internet Tablet from a Zaurus is that the company behind it seems actually interested in the success and is taking care about developers.

Apple was for several years. Sharp was for some years...

I have had a chance to play a little with a N770 today and my thoughs are that I am not really impressed. It looks like a sligthly shrinked Newton in black color. Appears a little thick (although thinner than a C-Zaurus). The display appeared less brilliant than a C Zaurus (but I could not compare them 1:1). The pen was a little long and difficult to extract.

The system reaction time is a little slow (menus etc.). It takes much longer to launch applications (browser, PDF viewer) than on a Z. The UI logic itself was not difficult to understand. Menu button simply opens menus. Applications can be found in the Menu. System settings allow to change parameters as expected. Popup windows have an Ok and a Cancel button. Interesting is that even the first menu level is vertical. And, you can control windows (i.e. close window, close all windows).

So, I think I will buy one to start to port QuantumSTEP on it and see how that performs :-)